See also Lucca, Italy
Torta di ciaccolata, a typical Lucchese dessert. Unbelievably rich and not as sweet as you might imagine.
Ladies and gentlemen, I give you thecornetto as God intended it. And by that I do not mean presented on a to-go bag on the seat of a bicycle.
From this satellite view, you can just make out the contours of the chocolate in this amazingcornetto. The same chocolate that ended up all over my hands a moment later. This thing was a monster, full of chocolate.
Another pie, this one made with apples, raisins and pine nuts.
Feel free to ogle all the other delights, but the star of this picture is the center row of chocolate and pear cakes--so beautiful it almost doesn't matter what they taste like. They taste like they look, rich and deadly.
One last look at the pies ofAngolo Dolce. On the top shelf, lemon.
Rocchi P's Pizzicheria La Grotta
What's a pizzicheria? It's a regional word for a salumeria. What's a salumeria? It's similar to a delicatessen but in addition to meats they sell several other items like cheese, bread, olives and olive oil, along with some prepared items; basically a one-stop-shop for all the simple foods for which Italy is famous. They are special places.
Italians care passionately about these foods. So the best pizzicherieand salumerie are run by people with a calling to provide them properly. This one lives up to its ideals.
Forno Alimentari G. Giurlani
This shop is a little more extensive. It bills itself as a panificio (bakery),pasticceria (pastry shop) and alimentari (grocery). It has some overlap with the pizzicheria, though, with dolci (sweets, from the dolciario, sweets shop), formaggi (cheeses), salumi (cured meats), rosticcerie (prepared foods), and pasta fresca (I'll let you guess this one) all on offer, along with vini e liquori (you should be able to guess this one too).
Benci
Benci, Lucca's answer to funnel cakes (included for my friend, Rhonda, who is addicted to the latter; see e.g. Things That are in My Stomach).
The Best Bakery in Lucca
This is where it gets complicated. Bakeries can sell pizza, but it's the square kind of pizza that comes on a huge baking sheet, called rustica, pictured here. The round kind that's thrown in the air by a pizzaiolo is made in a pizzeria. Bakeries also make the little round pizzini, also pictured here.
The rustica I had here came with a flaky crust, much different from Napoli pizza. I consumed to too quickly for picture taking, that's how good it was!
More Pies
The green ones are called verdura (vegetable), but they aren't savory, they're sweet. The tan one in the middle on the bottom row is made with nuts. The others are a combination of vanilla or panna cotta with chocolate. I have not been lucky enough to try them all.
See also Lucca, Italy
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